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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1962)
LIBRARY ARRIVALS Inland Wafprvavt Trin vbbbot ewe wm j av v nor g vbwbbvw.b Told By Adventurous Ann Davidson "In The Wake of the Gemini" by Ann Davison is the story of a voyage ihe made a 6,000 mile trip through the inland waterways of the U.S. and Canada. Experiences On Trip Adventuresome Ann is to sailing what Jacqueline Cochran is to fly ing. She is the only woman ever to have sailed the Atlantic single handed. The inland waterway trip Douglas 4-Hers Win Fair Trip Four Douglas County girls will be among 59 4-H Club members from Lane, Linn and Douglas coun ties who will be guests of the Eu gene Farmers Creamery on a tour of the Worlds Fair June 9. They will be on the 10th and final Dangold Award trip for out standing 4-H dairy herdsmen. The four are Mary Russell, Lin da Russell, Aethel Wise, all of Yoncalla; and Jane Green of Oak land. The entire group will board a chartered DC7 at Eugene Airport at 8 a.m. on June 9, nave break fast on the plane and land at Se-altle-Tacoma Airport at 7:30 a.m Chartered buses will take the 4-Hers to the fair. At 7:15 p.m. the 4-Hers and their chaperones will leave Seattle, and have dinner aboard their plane. At 8:45 p.m they will land in Eugene. The trip will be the climax to a decade of Darigold Award tours - which have gone to various parts of the West Coast and Canada. The fund which has supported the 4-H touri will be depleted with this year's event, according to Fred Kesay, manager for the Eu gene Farmers' Creamery. The fund was made up of unclaimed patronage dividends. School Board AtGlendale Okays Student Insurance The Glendale Board of Educa tion at its last meeting at the high school accepted the National Hos pital Plan for student insurance for the 1982-63 school year, accord ing to Mrs. Gerald Fox, correspond ent. The plan will be similar to that used this year with two excep tions: The student will have to pay the first $5 on any accident (In football, it will be the first 510); and expenses will be fully paid for, up to $10,000 on any one injury, af ter the student has paid the deduc tible amount. The board felt it Republicans Conducting Poll On National issues James Richmond, Douglas Coun ty Central Committee Chairman, is among several thousand Keputm can grass-roots leaders whose opuv ions on organization and issues are being sought this month by the National Committee. Results will provide guidelines for shaping campaign strategy at the Republican National Commit tee meeting in Seattle, Wash., June 11-12. The questionnaire seeks to de termine (1) prospects of victory in November based on comparison of organizational strength with 1958, and (2) national issues about which the American people are most con cerned. "Samplings of popular opinion are indispensable to effective po litical campaigning," declared Chairman William Miller in his letter to Richmond. "With ample funds, our opponents have already launched a large-scale surveying operation." WE FEATURE SWIFT'S BEEF 25 Pound $13.49 50 Pound $25.98 PACK CONTAINS: Round, Sirloin, ChueV, Rib. Swin Steal;: Beef Rooit; Short Riby Gr. Beof; Souioqe Wt Invirt You To Round Steak Goad taring lb. Rib Steak Tender, Heverful - lb. Swiss Steak Reel economy lb. 59; 65' Sirloin Steak Mighty tarty ,69' T-Bone Steak You'll went mere .75' Porterhouse Reyel eering lb. 79' SteJt,Sirliin 7Qc Tin, beoeleei lb. 7 OPM MONDAY through was made alone, on a 17-foot out board cruiser, Gemini. Her ad ventures along the way make fas cinating reading. Miss Davison tells of boats and weather, navi gation charts, fuel supplies and marinas, locks and rising rivers. She writes delightfully, with the apt and unexpected turn of a phrase that hits the nail on the head. Among the things she liked and marveled at were the beauty of many of the places she visited and the extraordinary kindness and thoughtfulness of the people she met, both in the big, hectic marinas and at small landings in off-the-beaten-track villages. Move Against Japan The period of October 1944 to August 1945 is covered in "The Lib eration of the Philippines" by Samuel Eliot Morison. Through Admiral Morison's eloquence the half-forgotten, far-off names of the Philippine battles come to life again as he tells of the prelinin ary bombardments, the assaults over the beaches and the land fighting for the islands and Man ila, as well as of the countermeas- ures taken against the fanatical air attacks of the Japanese. Of par ticular interest is the chapter on the Irightful typoon of Dec. 18, 1944, in which three U.S. ships went down and over 800 lives were lost. The author pulls no punches in describing this and assessing the blame. Crime Club Selection England is the setting for the mystery novel, "But the Patient Died," by Fiona Sinclair, a Crime Uub selection. When Geoffrey Tremaine arriv ed at famed St. Justin's Hospital to confirm his new appointment as surgical registrar he found Ev erard Nicholson, the senior admin istrator, crumpled on the floor of his office in a coma. An emergen cy operation removed a brain tu- wanted the student to be covered as fully as possible by insurance. and that this could be best ac complished under the above ar rangement. Under the plan, the student will pay the same amount for insur ance as this year, $1.50 for each high school student and 25 cents for each elementary student. This amount is included in the $2 tee for the elementary and the $13.50 fee for the high school students Supt. Yoder recommended to the board that the high school fee be raised to $20 next year, with $6 of the amount to be placed in a textbook fund and returnable to the student at the end of the year, if his textbooks are in nearly as good condition as when the student re ceived them at the beginning of the year. This arrangement has be come necessary because of the treatment of the books by some of the students, Mrs. Fox reports. Yoder read the 1962 Elementary Standardization Report, and the board approved its being submit ted to the slate Department of Ed ucation. Bernie Halverson, mem ber, reported on investigations made on repairs needed at the teacherage, and these were approv ed. Halverson also reported on in vestigations showing that nothing needs to be done at the present time under the old elementary building. Discussions were held on student attendance problems, especially in the high school, and on ways in which education can be improved in areas other than academic. The Board awarded the Rose burg Office Machines Co. the bids on furnishing new typewriters for the school for the coming school year. SAVE THIS AD! ROSEBURG MEAT CO. 316 N. E. Winchester . OR 3-5433 . At the Trionglo . . . FREEZER PACK . . . Um Our BUDGET PLAN . . . Convenient Monthly Payments Beef, Veel, Steaks 101 Rump Roast CQc You'll went mere lb. k7 Chuck Steak Meaty eating lb. 55' Ground Round Lean and Tatty .. lb. 65' Chuck Roast Blade cut lb. 45' Chuck Roast ScveM bfi j ii .49' SATURDAY 9:00 to 6:00 Rv rrilifir mor and Nicholson seemea well on his way to recovery when, sud denly and mysteriously, he died. Tremaine quickly came to know the intimate and mysterious nature of his new hospital and his new colleagues and discovered that there was a horrible fear hanging over them all fear that had been set in motion by the late, and very dead, Nicholson. Other new arrivals at the li brary this week are: Adult Non-Fiction: The Road to Reno, Nelson Blake; It's a Big Continent, Ben Burman; Keeping Canaries, Cliff Newby; New Re vised Velazquez Spanish and Eng lish Dictionary, Mariano Velaz quez de la Cadena; Hurricane From China, Dennis Warner.' Adult Fiction: Joy to Levine!, Norma Rosen; A Time to Hate, Sel don Truss. Young Moderns Non Fiction: Ride With the Eagle, Julia Dav is; First Woman Ambulance Sur geon: Emily Barringer, Iris No ble; From the Eagle's Wing (MUIR), Hildegard Swift; Claim to Freedom, Grace Yaukey. Young Moderns Fiction: Run, Light Buck, Run!, B. F. Beebe; The To World of Davy Blount, Thelma Bell; A Wrinkle in Time, Madeleine Ljsngle; So Great Love, Gladys Malvern; No More Good-Bys, Grace Trotter. Juvenile Non-Fiction: The Sioux Indians, Sonia Bleeker; Once a Mouse Marcia Brown; Robert Goddard, Space Pioneer, Anne Dewey; A Black Bear's Story, Emil Liers; Owls in the Family, Farley Mowat; William Fargo. Young Mail Carrier, Katharine Wilkie. Juvenile Fiction: Ghost Horse, Joseph Chipperfield; Challenge at Second Base, Matthew Christoph er; They Had a Horse, Walter Ed monds; Across From Indian Shore, Barbara Robinson. Easy Books: Jeff and Mr. James' Pond, Esther Meeks; The Pile of Junk, Miriam Schlein; Weeks and Weeks, Mabel Watts. Claries Of Glendale See Library Dedication Rites By MRS. GERALD B. FOX Mr. and Mrs. Charles Clark and family of Glendale drove to Port land last week to attend the ded ication of the Multnomah College Clark Memorial Library. The library was dedicated to the memory of Clark's father, Edward L. Clark, who organized the col lege and brought it to accredita tion. The college is the only fully accredited junior college in the state. Clark acted as its president for a period of 33 years. Charles Clark is principal of the Glendale Elementary School. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Lee Munyon of Glendale are the parents of a 9 pound 3l ounce bahy girl born May 23, at the Forest Glen Hospi tal in Canyonville. The infant ar rived on the 69th birthday of her grandfather, C. A. Munyon of Springfield, a former Glendale res ident. Power Shortage Seen In Next 50 Years In NW PORTLAND (AP) - Scientists in private industry foresee a pos sible shortage of hydroelectric energy in the Northwest in the next 50 years, a physicist said this week. Earl A. Long, director of a Gen eral Dynamics Corp. laboratory and consultant to the Atomic Energy Commission, told the Port land Chamber of Commerce Mem bers Forum an atomic reactor is needed to supply cheap power. He said scientists must also pre pare for possible shortages of gas and oil as sources of energy. Swift's Locker BEEF Young StMrt, Hetfertttei. Cut It Wrapped Half or i0.45c Who! Chuck Roast Round tone 55 Beef Liver 39' Beef Stew 59' Boneteti Franks CMfJ-foihioweJ lb 39J Wieners 49' Bologna 39' Cdr Cheese 49' Mild Short Ribs Lompi, MtMty . . LOCKERS ,39' for RENT G'6 Instructor, Ann Beckley, instructor of girls physical education at Glide High School the past three years, has been notified by the naval officer of the Candidates School Recruit ing Center at Portland' that she has been accepted for training. ANN BECKLEY . . Naval duty calls ! . . . Save Time . . . Save Money . . . You Can Drive Farther, But You Can't Save More . . Shop Your Paul Bunyan Store . . ,g 116 PAH BUMYAM STORES f PHISOJTTHEIIt ZEST TIDE M I X 4m n GIANT W a f GAPS a 243' v Auiwrc comet Look f s - -m Vv AVINUi) reg. 9olc SPECIAL z 0 wJl ' ( I tin AOr VALUE I 1 RIDGEWAY MKT V J DFftllllSfcll NEW GREEN SALE ? Ri.r.dai. I LVlnbkJtt OXYDOL 10 BARS count 'em : C TRI-CITY MKT TT rnr V -JQC ZT ? 3 Myrrta Creek y4&& Rt " S GIANT 7 (VWOtt C I Med. Iff! fk l 3 DASH A-F 111 ' G1AWT 89' V NEW BLUE TABLET J W0S- f "donT IUZ-cheer -SALVO Kj r oa UJ YY M I 1 QUEEN SIZE GIANT GIANT mA WT J SOFTENER kto , 43 1 GIANT U7 your I t-si U p 1 1 ? SPiCnSPAN cHoia-Wj )fo J HILLS llll) i J: GIANT . 99C STOCKNVKg BROS. dft f J CASCADE 49c tlowiir savings?!! COFFEE OF 1 Criso Fresh HEAD 1 . LB. 2.LB X . t R " - OZ. "S IVORY T 11 IffilP FOR Instant g LETTUCE thL 59c V T V 0NU!3)c ! GROUND BEEF or StSM ""-"T" ! I SKINLESS WIENERS fib) -v"- t I OFF mY Grocery arlcoi foo4 Friday In I A HAVE PLENTY V I fW (Pi till " " or W I H.rai.h Sunday. Meat and 1 FOR HOME AND "l) SWjC 11 -S5T -J f U FOR PICNICS e Oj z?-J GIANT daalan. W. reserve H 3 3 V AJ Maswiail SIZE V rt,ht te limit qaantirioa. n o " - mmmmmmi mmmmmmmmmmKmmmm mmmmmmma 3, GEORGE'S fLtfiXx BARNEY'S 2 RIDGEWAY M0Dl 4&k TR,.CTY j MARKET MARKET m$$ mRKET RIVERSDAIE EU wiucrnu TvVw MYRTIE CREEK iordi V. M. at Curry ltd ?Mlik VVINJIUN . open dmtii open t Klyii GpEN I - Op Sunday, jjjg Sunday. - z3m2 Sutldoyl - 10-8 ' . . . Save Time . . . Save Money . .". You Can Drive Farther, But You Can't Save More . . . Shop Your Paul Bunyan StoroT. . Ann Beckley, To I Sixteen weeks schooling will , commence July 1 at Newport. R.I I .Miss Beckley will be flown via jet plane to her destination from Port land. Upon completion of successful training, she will be commissioned an officer of the U. S. Navy. Inter views, testing and a physical ex amination started several months ago in conjunction with her appli cation. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Beckley of Elkton, she is a 1938 graduate of Oregon State State Emergency Board SALEM (AP)-The state Emer gency Board will meet Friday to consider acquiring land for the proposed $2.3 million science build ing at Portland Stale College. Other items on Hi agenda: A request by the Department of Employment to spend $432,000 for office buildings at Klamath Falls. Request for $62,000 for equip Receive Naval Commission University. Since coming to Glide High School, she has organized several organizations in the school including the Pep Club. She has been adviser of the Rally Squad , which became known for its spir- ited precision routines. In addition Miss Beckley was in charge of the adult female Volleyball group and is also an adviser for Project 35, Glide High School's Mexico bound group. Her acceptance in the Navy, makes three Glide High School in structors entering the service of Considers Expenditures ment for the University of Oregon Medical School Teaching Hospital. A $285,000 request for increasing the vocational education program. Another $111,000 for forest fire protection. Another $224,000 for salmon re search. About $11,000 for final plans for the computer building at Oregon State University. Thurs., May 31, 1962 The the U. S. Government this summer. The other two are Gene Rosachi and Jerry Lemert joining the Peace Corps. FREE 1 Qt. VALLEY MILK With Each Vi Gallon At Eastside Market Friday & Saturday Only EASTSIDE MARKET 2595 N. E. Diamond Lake Blvd. Ray Newt - Review, Roseffurg, Ore. 3 Detroit Tiger Manager Bob Schefflmg managed Washington, Pa., to second place in the Penn sylvania State League in 1939, two years before he broke into the majors as a catcher with the Chi cago Cubs.